Field evidence reveals that the Neolithic village of Atlit-Yam (Israeli coast) was destroyed in an event which also caused the sudden death of tens of inhabitants. Archaeological evidence and numerical simulations support the notion that the village was destroyed, ~8.3 ka B.P., by a tsunami triggered by a known Holocene flank collapse of Mt. Etna volcano (Italy). The filling of a water well within the village confirms inundation by a tsunami wave train and a sediment layer, composed of a clayed-sandy matrix and other detritus including reworked marine sediment, indicates tsunami inundation. This scenario shows that tsunamis generated by sector collapses from coastal volcanoes can seriously threaten near-shore settlements thousands of kilome...
In 2001, the Old City of Akko in northern Israel was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site. This des...
The role of sector collapse in the generation of catastrophic volcanigenic tsunami has become well u...
The outcrop of the tsunami deposits, about 6 m thick, is located in the archaeological site Tel Aska...
Field evidence reveals that the Neolithic village of Atlit-Yam (Israeli coast) was destroyed in an e...
Numerical simulations support the occurrence of a catastrophic tsunami impacting all of the eastern ...
Tsunami events in antiquity had a profound influence on coastal societies. Six thousand years of his...
Tsunami events in antiquity had a profound influence on coastal societies. Six thousand years of his...
In the early Holocene a devastating tsunami flooded the coasts of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea [Pa...
co-auteur étrangerInternational audienceIn this work, we document two distinct tsunami deposits on t...
South-eastern Sicily is one of the most seismically active areas of the Mediterranean Sea, marked by...
The Minoan Thera eruption of the Bronze Age is the most significant Aegean explosive volcanism. The ...
Eastern Sicily has been affected in historical times by large earthquakes followed by devastating ts...
The reliability of the narrative of the Biblical Exodus has been subject of heated debate for decade...
Eastern Sicily has been affected in historical times by large earthquakes followed by devastating ts...
none3noAbout 8.3 ka ago a devastating tsunami flooded the coasts of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea [P...
In 2001, the Old City of Akko in northern Israel was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site. This des...
The role of sector collapse in the generation of catastrophic volcanigenic tsunami has become well u...
The outcrop of the tsunami deposits, about 6 m thick, is located in the archaeological site Tel Aska...
Field evidence reveals that the Neolithic village of Atlit-Yam (Israeli coast) was destroyed in an e...
Numerical simulations support the occurrence of a catastrophic tsunami impacting all of the eastern ...
Tsunami events in antiquity had a profound influence on coastal societies. Six thousand years of his...
Tsunami events in antiquity had a profound influence on coastal societies. Six thousand years of his...
In the early Holocene a devastating tsunami flooded the coasts of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea [Pa...
co-auteur étrangerInternational audienceIn this work, we document two distinct tsunami deposits on t...
South-eastern Sicily is one of the most seismically active areas of the Mediterranean Sea, marked by...
The Minoan Thera eruption of the Bronze Age is the most significant Aegean explosive volcanism. The ...
Eastern Sicily has been affected in historical times by large earthquakes followed by devastating ts...
The reliability of the narrative of the Biblical Exodus has been subject of heated debate for decade...
Eastern Sicily has been affected in historical times by large earthquakes followed by devastating ts...
none3noAbout 8.3 ka ago a devastating tsunami flooded the coasts of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea [P...
In 2001, the Old City of Akko in northern Israel was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site. This des...
The role of sector collapse in the generation of catastrophic volcanigenic tsunami has become well u...
The outcrop of the tsunami deposits, about 6 m thick, is located in the archaeological site Tel Aska...